Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (Thoracic)
6,478 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty-two patients with small cell lung cancer were treated with a combination of carboplatin, ifosfamide and etoposide. Vincristine was given on day 14 of each course, the courses being repeated every 28 days for a maximum of six. Thoracic radiotherapy was given 4 weeks after the last course of chemotherapy but no prophylactic cranial radiotherapy was administered. Thirty patients had clinically limited state disease, the remaining patients having contralateral neck lymphadenopathy and/or pleural effusions. Elevated enzyme levels (alkaline phosphatase, LDH, ALT, GGT) were noted in 69% of patients. Twenty-four patients (57%) achieved a complete response (CR) when assessed one month after the end of treatment. A further 21% of patients had a partial response (PR). Median duration of CR was 14 months and of PR 8 months. Cerebral metastases were the sole site of relapse in 13% of the CR patients. Myelosuppression was severe with a median nadir of neutropenia of 0.2 x 10(9) cells 1-1. However, 74% of the patient group received all six courses of chemotherapy and only 16 courses (7%) were delayed because of toxicity. There were three deaths associated with treatment-related neutropenia. The median survival of the total group was 14 months, with an actuarial 2 year survival of 37% and a minimum follow-up of 18 months. [A recent analysis, March 1989, demonstrated a 33%, 2 year actual survival.]
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PMID:Carboplatin, ifosfamide and etoposide with mid-course vincristine and thoracic radiotherapy for 'limited' stage small cell carcinoma of the bronchus. 255 90

The increase of alcoholism-related problems is associated with vital postoperative clinical complications in chronic alcohol abusers. In particular, the alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) may provoke potentially life-threatening complications in alcohol-dependent patients. Hence, a precise diagnosis of alcohol dependence is mandatory preoperatively, requiring an extensive case history using alcoholism-associated questionnaires. Additional new biological markers for detecting alcoholism could improve the accuracy of preoperative diagnosis. Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) reflects increased alcohol consumption. The aim of our interdisciplinary study was to investigate whether the validity of the preoperative diagnosis of chronic alcohol abuse might be improved by measuring CDT. METHODS. A total of 45 patients from the departments of Otorhinolaryngology, Maxillofacial Surgery, and Abdominal and Thoracic Surgery were included in our prospective clinical study. Patients underwent resection of malignant oral, pharyngeal, laryngeal, or oesophageal tumours and were transferred to the intensive care unit for postoperative management. Routine preoperative history, examinations, and laboratory tests including GGT, MCV, ASAT, and ALAT, were supplemented by a specific alcohol-related questionnaire and CDT measurement. The patients were categorised in four groups based on history and the questionnaire: continuously abstinent subjects; sober subjects for at least 7 days; chronic abusers; and dependent subjects. CDT was separated by isocratic anion exchange chromatography and quantified by turbidimetric determination. Statistical analysis was performed by the Kruskal-Wallis test. RESULTS. Preoperatively, 21 patients were at major risk for alcoholism-related complications: 12 were chronic abusers and 9 were diagnosed as dependent. CDT was significantly increased in both groups, and was pathologically elevated in 16 of the 21 patients. Sampling occurred significantly long after the last alcohol intake in the 5 patients with normal CDT values (median: 6.0 days; range: 2-12 days) compared with the 16 with pathologically elevated CDT levels (median: 1.0 day; range: 0-4 days; P = 0.002). The sensitivity of CDT elevation was 16 out of 24 (76%), the specificity 16 out of 16 (100%). Sixteen patients had no previous history of alcohol consumption (sober for at least 7 days) and 8 were definitely abstinent. Both of these groups had normal CDT values. CONCLUSIONS. CDT was a sensitive and specific marker for chronic alcohol consumption in our patient population. Since CDT is a state marker, repeated determinations might be useful to estimate a patient's drinking habits. The combination of CDT and an alcohol-related questionnaire was reliable for detecting alcohol-dependent patients preoperatively.
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PMID:[The relevance of CDT (carbohydrate-deficient transferrin). Preoperative diagnosis of chronic alcohol abuse in intensive care patients following elective tumor resection]. 809 54

We conducted a survey of thoracic surgery in the UK today. Questionnaires were sent to 75 cardiothoracic surgeons, known to perform thoracic surgery regularly; we had a 100% response. The commonest preoperative investigations for carcinoma of the oesophagus were serum alkaline phosphatase (90%), GGT (69%), contrast swallow (80%), ultrasound of abdomen (71%) and CT scan of chest and abdomen (60%). After oesophagectomy, 84% of the surgeons inserted nasogastric tubes and 31% sent their patients to the intensive care unit. Oral fluids were started on days 3-5 in 81% of cases, and 58% of the surgeons requested a postoperative contrast swallow, usually between the seventh and tenth postoperative days, after oral fluids had been started. Most of the surgeons nearly always used staplers for a given procedure or else completely avoided them for that part of the operation. The commonest use of staplers was for bronchial closure in pneumonectomy (67%) and lobectomy (48%) and in constructing an oesophageal anastomosis (25%). Twenty per cent of the surgeons did not insert a chest drain after pneumonectomy, while 65% observed the protocol of chest drain insertion with short intermittent unclamping, usually every hour, followed by removal of the drain, usually the next morning. Thoracic surgeons vary widely in their surgical practices. In a well structured training programme, trainees should rotate between several units so they are exposed to different techniques and ideas and acquire a broad based training.
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PMID:A national survey of thoracic surgical practice in the UK. 1056 65